4.1 - Enzyme Action Flashcards

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1
Q

What are the propertes of enzymes?

A
  • Globular protein - 3D shape to interact with substrates specifically
  • The active site is complementaty to the shape of a substrate
  • Lowers Ea of a reaction
  • Enzyme left unchanged after a reaction
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2
Q

What are the roles of enzymes?

A
  • Catalyses metabolic & anabolic reactions
  • Enzymes can be intracellular (catalase) - converts H2O2 (toxic metabolic product) to water and oxygen
  • Enzymes can be extracellular (amylase, trypsin)
    • Amylase -
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3
Q

What are intracellular enzymes and their roles?

A
  • Enzymes that act within cells
  • Enzymes have a role in structure and function of cells and organisms.
  • Enzymes needed or synthesis of polymers - e.g. polysaccharides from glucose
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4
Q

How can enzyme controlled reactions be successful?

A

Enzymes and substrates must collide in the correct orientation Increase in temperature and pressure means more successful collisions and rate of reaction increases

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5
Q

What is activation energy and how does it relate to enzymes?

A

Activation energy is the minimum amount of energy required to start a reaction - this may be too high under normal conditions Enzymes lower the activation energy by providing alternative reaction pathways helping molecules to collide more successfully.

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6
Q

Define active site.

A

Area within enzyme’s tertiary structure with a shape specifically complementary to its substrate.

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7
Q

Describe the lock and key hypothesis.

A
  • Substrate binds to active site forming enzyme-substrate complex
  • The substrate reacts and is converted to a product forming the enzyme-product complex
  • The product is released from the enzyme which is left to catalyse another reaction
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8
Q

How does the substrate stay bound to the enzyme during the lock and key hypothesis?

A

The substrate is held to the enzyme as R-groups of the active site interact with the substrate forming temporary bonds.

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9
Q

Describe the induced-fit hypothesis.

A
  • Active site is not perfectly complementary to the substrate
  • Once the substrate interacts with the active site, it inteferes with the active site bonds to alter the shape
    • This gives a perfect complementary fit for the substrate
  • Since the active site shape changes, it is easier to make and break bonds (reducing activation energy)
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10
Q

Describe the process of starch digestion (use of extracellular digestion)

A
  1. Polysaccharides are broken into the disaccharide maltose by amylase
    • Amylase is produced by the salivary glands and the pancreas
  2. Maltose is then broken down to the monosaccharide glucose by maltase
    • Maltase produced in the small intestine
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11
Q

Describe the process of protein digestion.

A
  • Involves protease Trypsin - a type of protease
    • produced by pancreas in small intestine
  • catalyses digestion of protein into smaller peptides
  • Other proteases break peptides into amino acids
  • These amino acids are absorbed by cell lining of digestive system
    • absorbed into blood stream.
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